• Frontline implementation of welfare conditionality in Norway: A maternalistic practice 

      Gjersøe, Heidi Moen; Leseth, Anne; Vilhena, Susana (Social Policy and Administration;First published 09 December 2019, Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2019-11-19)
      Welfare conditionality is both ambitious and ambiguous for the frontline workers who put policy into practice. Since January 2017, the Norwegian frontline service should require social assistance benefit recipients under ...
    • Frontline managers' perceptions and justifications of behavioural conditionality 

      Sadeghi, Talieh; Terum, Lars Inge (Social Policy & Administration;Volume 54, Issue 2, Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2020-01-06)
      The debate on behavioural conditionality is characterised by abundant controversies. Frontline managers have a particularly important role in implementing these policies because their interpretation of the welfare policies ...
    • Research approaches to networked employment services: A systematic review 

      Andreassen, Tone Alm; Breit, Eric; Saltkjel, Therese (Social Policy & Administration;, Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2020-04-01)
      Research on networked services aimed at the (re)employment of groups marginalised from the labour market has gained momentum in different scholarly traditions (e.g., public administration, healthcare and social policy), ...
    • Sanctioning the sick: Do perceptions of activating the sick and diagnosis matter? 

      Fekjær, Silje Bringsrud; Rasmussen, Erik Børve; Terum, Lars Inge (Social Policy & Administration;Volume 56, Issue 5, Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2022-02-02)
      The recent inclusion of behavioural conditionality in health-related benefit programmes raises questions about frontline workers' (FWs') discretionary use of sanctioning. Using an experimental vignette design in a survey ...
    • Sanctioning the sick: Do perceptions of activating the sick and diagnosis matter? 

      Fekjær, Silje Bringsrud; Rasmussen, Erik Børve; Terum, Lars Inge (Social Policy & Administration;Volume 56, Issue 5, Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2022)
      The recent inclusion of behavioural conditionality in health-related benefit programmes raises questions about frontline workers' (FWs') discretionary use of sanctioning. Using an experimental vignette design in a survey ...